Clean and Sanitize Equipment

Properly Clean and Sanitize all Cider Making Equipment

One of the biggest mistakes a new cider maker can make is to overlook cleanliness and sanitation of anything that will be used in the fermentation process. Skipping this important step will lead to bacterial infections, mold, funky smells and all sorts of nasty microscopic garbage. Messing up one batch of cider will easily cost more than a container of no-rinse sanitizer. These sanitizers, such as OneStep or StarSan are incredibly quick and simple to use so there is no excuse for leaving them out of your cider making process.

Begin with Clean Equipment!

Cleaning and sanitizing may sound like the same thing, but they are slightly different. Sanitizers will not remove residues and cannot properly sanitize residues so it is very important to thoroughly wash equipment before and after use. While some may use dish soap for cleaning, the bubbles can be a pain so I suggest a cleaner specifically designed for brewing and winemaking such as PBW by Five Star. This product is an oxidizer, like Oxyclean, and will leave your cider making equipment squeaky clean.

Give everything a good scrub with a brush. Even if you do not see any debris a light film from previous use could be on the surface. Items that cannot easily be scrubbed, such as siphon hoses should be allowed to soak a little longer and be flushed out multiple times. ( after use as well!)

Sanitize!

Start by sanitizing your biggest container, in most cases, this will be the fermentor. This way, once the vessel is sanitized, the sanitizer solution can be poured off into a food grade bucket or brew kettle to be used for sanitizing all other cider making equipment.

Step One:

Measure out the required amount as stated on the sanitizers package based on how much water required.

These are the most popular brands, one is a powder and the other is a liquid, but they both work great and it comes down to personal preference. Both require two minutes of contact time for full sanitization and do not require a rinse.

Step Two:

Soak, swish, and scrub! Make sure all equipment has had at least two minutes of contact time with the sanitizer solution. Check for air bubbles in airlocks and hoses to ensure full contact.

Step Three:

Don’t rinse or dry with a towel as this will only contaminate your newly clean equipment. No-rinse sanitizers are meant to be used without the need of rinsing or drying which means it is safe to fill your fermenter while it is still dripping wet.

Everything Means Everything!

Once fermentation has ended and you are ready to bottle the cider, don’t forget to repeat this process! The secondary, siphon, bottles and caps all need to be properly cleaned and sanitized before use!

Browse

Home Cider Making

The Home Cider Making website began when I returned to the USA from a two year trip around the world. The craft cider that I enjoyed on the road was hard to find back home where a cider was more like a soda with a splash of alcohol.

This lead me to craft my own hard cider which stemmed into a serious hobby of weekly fermenting and liberally tasting.

Affiliate Disclosure:

I only recommend products that I truly believe in and/or use for learning how to make hard cider.

Home Cider Making is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to Amazon.com.